Monday, December 30, 2019

The Case Of Briony Tallis s Atonement And Ralph From...

Is there a way to pinpoint the exact moment one becomes an â€Å"adult†? Many argue that this moment is created by a series of revelations and exposure to the world of adulthood. In the case of Briony Tallis from Ian McEwan’s novel Atonement and Ralph from William Golding’s Lord of the Flies we see two children sharing comparable internal struggles associated with a loss of innocence. Due to their lack of parental support upon their loss of innocence both Briony and Ralph enter into a territory completely foreign to what they once knew. For both children we see them comparing the differences between the reactions of children and adults in serious situations, as well as sharing an occurrence of switching between the two states (children versus adult), where they find a blurred boundary between the two causing various levels of confusion. Finally although both children find themselves losing their innocence, the nature of their reactions to it are different from on e another. Both novels explore in detail the difficulty in realizing that the world you have always known is not the only one. The starting point of Briony and Ralph’s loss of innocence is with the initial discovery that there are significant differences between the thoughts of children and adults. In Atonement Briony reads a letter addressed to her older sister containing topics and phrases mostly foreign to her. From only her sister Cecilia s flustered reaction upon discovering that she had read the letter, Briony

Saturday, December 21, 2019

Analysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner

Thando Muchemenyi Mr. Super English 10 Honours 11 March 2015 Like Father Like Son Khaled Hosseini, the author of The Kite Runner, uses irony repeatedly throughout the novel. Amir, the protagonist faces the unintended consequences from his actions. These situations are often ironic as they are the complete opposite of what Amir intended to do. Through the use of irony, Khaled Hosseini reveals the hidden similarities between fathers and sons, thus creating more emotion, value, and meaning to the novel. On the day of the kite tournament, Amir hopes bringing back the blue kite to his father would make his father proud of him. But by making the decision to not stop Assef from raping Hassan was definitely not going to make his father proud. Amir chose his father’s approval over doing the right thing, which was helping his best friend, Hassan. Baba had once said, â€Å"In the hour of need, believe me there’s no one you’d rather have at your side than a Pashtun.†(Hosseini 60) This is extremely ironic because Amir, the Pashtun was unable to help Hassan in his time of need yet Hassan, the Hazar was always willing and ready to help Amir in all his times of need. Amir learns that Baba is actually Hassan’s biological father and that Baba had betrayed his best friend Ali, by conceiving Hassan with Ali’s wife. And so Amir understands that he is just like Baba in the sense that they both share betrayal of their best friends. Baba and Amir share more than just betrayal of their best friends.Show MoreRelatedAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1256 Words   |  6 Pagesthe novel, ‘The Kite Runner’, by Khaled Hosseini, occur where authority has been mistaken for enormity. Baba s expectations out of Amir and his tactics of dominance towards making Amir into someone he desires, is the power, mistook as magnitude. Also, the element that baba was sexually convoluted with Ali s wife, but had the capacity to keep it concealed and buried for long, is the power, of power. Furthermore, how Amir takes advantage of him being superior in terms of society s perception, overRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner Essay1177 Words   |  5 PagesWith No Name (Yet) â€Å"As long as there is love and memory, there is no true death† (Cassandra Clare, Lady Midnight). In Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, this quote is proven to be true through the character of Hassan. Hassan s character and memory are kept alive through both the physicality and actions of his son, Sohrab, and his best friend and half-brother, Amir. Hosseini describes Hassan as having a perfectly round face, a face like a Chinese doll chiseled from hardwood: his flat, broadRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1019 Words   |  5 Pagesknows just how hard it is to forgive yourself in The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini. When Amir makes the decision to not speak up about Hassan he felt so much guilt that he wanted Hassan and Ali to leave, he regretted it instantly. Years later, Rahim khan called Amir and asked him to come back to Afghanistan where he found out Hassan was his half-brother. Amir finally forgave himself when he found a way to make up for his mistakes. Hosseini portrays Amir as a morally ambiguous character by his guiltRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 2073 Words   |  9 Pagesexchanged cute heart necklaces or pendants or carved your names into a tree. In Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner, two kids, Amir, and Hassan seem to have a strong friendship, represented in their names carved into a pomegranate tree. However, Amir reveals weakness in their friendship when he betrays Hassan by not intervening when the town bully, Assef, sexually assaults Hassan. In Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, Carol S. Dweck describes two types of mindsets. One is the fixed mindset, which isRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1230 Words   |  5 PagesHaunting Desires In Khaled Hosseini’s novel The Kite Runner, father son relationships, specifically that of Amir and Baba, contribute to the development of the plot as well as the development of the characters involved. It is evident throughout the novel that Amir’s sole desire is to obtain Baba’s love and acceptance. However, this desire ultimately motivates him to enact rash decisions that will haunt him in the future. What Amir does not know is that Baba is also secretly the father of HassanRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1516 Words   |  7 PagesAdrian Zialcita Mrs. Sheffield English 1A 10/30/15 All for One and None for All According to Merriam Webster, being selfish is â€Å"to have or show concern for only yourself and not for the needs or feelings of other people.† In Khaled Hosseini’s book, The Kite Runner, the character Amir goes through numerous hardships throughout the story. To overcome those challenges, he performs acts that directly caused harm to the other characters in the book. Most of the time, the struggles that Amir passesRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1017 Words   |  5 Pages Kite Runner Comparison Essay In Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, several major themes arise. One of the most pronounced theme is the idea of redemption for ones past wrongdoings. The protagonist, a wealthy envious Afghan boy named Amir, retells the traumatic story of his childhood. Once readers learn of his past, they realize the issues he experienced and the events that came into play in the forming of the plots format, from one meaningful quote Hassan says â€Å" for you a thousand times over†Read MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1326 Words   |  6 PagesAaron Heideman Mrs. Edelman 11v2 English 2/17/15 The Kite Runner Essay The father-son relationship portrayed in Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, demonstrates the necessity of an empathetic fatherly figure in a child’s life. Some of these relationships exist between Hassan and Sohrab, Baba and Amir, and later Amir and Sohrab. The tense relationship Amir and his father, Baba, share and consequently, the events that stem from this relationship truly help develop the necessitation of a fatherly figureRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1076 Words   |  5 Pages Shakespeare’s famous â€Å"to be or not to be?† enters the mind. In the case of The Kite Runner, readers examine a similar question: to betray or not to betray? In Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, different characters choose to either engage in or avoid betrayal due to personal motives, subsequently influencing their future. Sanaubar, Hassan’s mother, holds intense motivations to betray those closest to her. Hosseini reveals Sanaubar’s infidelity in a conversation between Rahim Khan and Amir, statingRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1161 Words   |  5 PagesKhaled Hosseini reveals the subject of friendship and loyalty in The Kite Runner. Khaled Hosseini advocates that in friendship, there must be loyalty, kindness, and trust. The theme of loyalty plays a tremendous role in The Kite Runner through Hassan and Amir. Amir and Hassan grow up together in Kabul, Afghanistan. Amir lives in a house with his father, Baba. Hassan and his father, Ali, live on the same piece of property as Amir and Baba because Hassan and Ali are their servants. Although Hassan Analysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner When you were a child, do you remember ever making a promise to be loyal to a friend? Maybe you exchanged cute heart necklaces or pendants or carved your names into a tree. In Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner, two kids, Amir, and Hassan seem to have a strong friendship, represented in their names carved into a pomegranate tree. However, Amir reveals weakness in their friendship when he betrays Hassan by not intervening when the town bully, Assef, sexually assaults Hassan. In Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, Carol S. Dweck describes two types of mindsets. One is the fixed mindset, which is the belief that a person has a fixed amount of intelligence, and one cannot see growth in error, and a growth mindset, which is the belief that†¦show more content†¦Amir s relationship with Baba causes him to have the fixed mindset, but he begins to transition from the fixed to the growth mindset when he meets Soraya, and lastly he develops the growth mindset when Rahim Khan encoura ges him to take the responsibility for Sohrab. Baba’s high expectation influences Amir s fixed mindset because Baba feels that his son should be more courageous and follow the values that make up a Pashtun man. Throughout Amir s childhood Baba always sets these high expectations for Amir that leads Amir to believe that one cannot be weak at things. Throughout the story, Amir is a shy insecure boy while Baba is a confident and proud man. Due to Amir s introverted self, he spends most of his time reading books and poetry; while Baba tries to force his interest onto his son Amir for the purpose that Baba wants Amir to be the great example of what a Pushtun man should be. An example that shows Baba has a fixed mindset was when Amir states, With me as the glaring exception, my father molded the world around him to his liking. The problem, of course, was that Baba saw the world in black and white. And he got to decide what was black and what was white. You can t love a person who lives that way without fearing him too. Maybe eve n hating him a little (Hossieni15). This quote shows that Baba was a man with a strong personality, and it was his way or the highway. This instills so much fear in Amir that he is afraid of committing mistakes around his Analysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner Hannah Olvera Mrs. Dixon-Willden AP Literature and Composition 8 December 14 War: Ripping at the Seams In The Kite Runner, Khaled Hosseini reveals a socioeconomic issue, war, which is still relevant in today’s society. The novel portrays the difference between common life battles and a real revolution during both the nineteen seventies, and two thousand one. The common battles include battling for approval by a role model, overcoming bullies, and finding yourself. Throughout time, war has continually ripped seams all over the world. Hosseini reveals this through war between countries and inner conflicts within a character. Because war still exists today, this socioeconomic element is still relevant in tearing apart countries, allies, and families. Hosseini’s novel, The Kite Runner, takes place in Afghanistan during two different wars. The first war takes place from the nineteen seventies until nineteen eighty-eight, but a part of it has rolled into present day, two thousand fourteen. This war originally involved Afghanistan and the Soviet Union, but is now a civil war in Afghanistan (â€Å"The Afghan War†). In 1978, â€Å"Afghanistan changed forever,† (Hosseini 34). The power in Afghanistan was overthrown and handed to Marxist-Leninist political parties until the invasion of Afghanistan by Soviet troops in 1979 (â€Å"The Afghan War†). The Soviet War with Afghanistan was responsible for ripping apart families and the country of Afghanistan. During this time, 4.3 million Afghan citizensShow MoreRelatedAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1256 Words   |  6 Pagesthe novel, ‘The Kite Runner’, by Khaled Hosseini, occur where authority has been mistaken for enormity. Baba s expectations out of Amir and his tactics of dominance towards making Amir into someone he desires, is the power, mistook as magnitude. Also, the element that baba was sexually convoluted with Ali s wife, but had the capacity to keep it concealed and buried for long, is the power, of power. Furthermore, how Amir takes advantage of him being superior in terms of society s perception, overRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner Essay1177 Words   |  5 PagesWith No Name (Yet) â€Å"As long as there is love and memory, there is no true death† (Cassandra Clare, Lady Midnight). In Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, this quote is proven to be true through the character of Hassan. Hassan s character and memory are kept alive through both the physicality and actions of his son, Sohrab, and his best friend and half-brother, Amir. Hosseini describes Hassan as having a perfectly round face, a face like a Chinese doll chiseled from hardwood: his flat, broadRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1019 Words   |  5 Pagesknows just how hard it is to forgive yourself in The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini. When Amir makes the decision to not speak up about Hassan he felt so much guilt that he wanted Hassan and Ali to leave, he regretted it instantly. Years later, Rahim khan called Amir and asked him to come back to Afghanistan where he found out Hassan was his half-brother. Amir finally forgave himself when he found a way to make up for his mistakes. Hosseini portrays Amir as a morally ambiguous character by his guiltRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 2073 Words   |  9 Pagesexchanged cute heart necklaces or pendants or carved your names into a tree. In Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner, two kids, Amir, and Hassan seem to have a strong friendship, represented in their names carved into a pomegranate tree. However, Amir reveals weakness in their friendship when he betrays Hassan by not intervening when the town bully, Assef, sexually assaults Hassan. In Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, Carol S. Dweck describes two types of mindsets. One is the fixed mindset, which isRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 966 Words   |  4 PagesMarch 2015 Like Father Like Son Khaled Hosseini, the author of The Kite Runner, uses irony repeatedly throughout the novel. Amir, the protagonist faces the unintended consequences from his actions. These situations are often ironic as they are the complete opposite of what Amir intended to do. Through the use of irony, Khaled Hosseini reveals the hidden similarities between fathers and sons, thus creating more emotion, value, and meaning to the novel. On the day of the kite tournament, Amir hopes bringingRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1230 Words   |  5 PagesHaunting Desires In Khaled Hosseini’s novel The Kite Runner, father son relationships, specifically that of Amir and Baba, contribute to the development of the plot as well as the development of the characters involved. It is evident throughout the novel that Amir’s sole desire is to obtain Baba’s love and acceptance. However, this desire ultimately motivates him to enact rash decisions that will haunt him in the future. What Amir does not know is that Baba is also secretly the father of HassanRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1516 Words   |  7 PagesAdrian Zialcita Mrs. Sheffield English 1A 10/30/15 All for One and None for All According to Merriam Webster, being selfish is â€Å"to have or show concern for only yourself and not for the needs or feelings of other people.† In Khaled Hosseini’s book, The Kite Runner, the character Amir goes through numerous hardships throughout the story. To overcome those challenges, he performs acts that directly caused harm to the other characters in the book. Most of the time, the struggles that Amir passesRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1017 Words   |  5 Pages Kite Runner Comparison Essay In Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, several major themes arise. One of the most pronounced theme is the idea of redemption for ones past wrongdoings. The protagonist, a wealthy envious Afghan boy named Amir, retells the traumatic story of his childhood. Once readers learn of his past, they realize the issues he experienced and the events that came into play in the forming of the plots format, from one meaningful quote Hassan says â€Å" for you a thousand times over†Read MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1326 Words   |  6 PagesAaron Heideman Mrs. Edelman 11v2 English 2/17/15 The Kite Runner Essay The father-son relationship portrayed in Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, demonstrates the necessity of an empathetic fatherly figure in a child’s life. Some of these relationships exist between Hassan and Sohrab, Baba and Amir, and later Amir and Sohrab. The tense relationship Amir and his father, Baba, share and consequently, the events that stem from this relationship truly help develop the necessitation of a fatherly figureRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1076 Words   |  5 Pages Shakespeare’s famous â€Å"to be or not to be?† enters the mind. In the case of The Kite Runner, readers examine a similar question: to betray or not to betray? In Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, different characters choose to either engage in or avoid betrayal due to personal motives, subsequently influencing their future. Sanaubar, Hassan’s mother, holds intense motivations to betray those closest to her. Hosseini reveals Sanaubar’s infidelity in a conversation between Rahim Khan and Amir, stating Analysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner Aaron Heideman Mrs. Edelman 11v2 English 2/17/15 The Kite Runner Essay The father-son relationship portrayed in Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, demonstrates the necessity of an empathetic fatherly figure in a child’s life. Some of these relationships exist between Hassan and Sohrab, Baba and Amir, and later Amir and Sohrab. The tense relationship Amir and his father, Baba, share and consequently, the events that stem from this relationship truly help develop the necessitation of a fatherly figure in one’s life. A common clichà © exists that â€Å"The apple doesn’t fall too far from the tree,† however that is not the case in the relationship between Baba and Amir, the protagonist of the story. Baba is not that ideal fatherly figure to Amir since he can’t seem to understand why Amir is not a perfect mirror image of the man he is. Baba vents to his close friend Rahim Kahn regarding Amir’s dissimilar interests to him: â€Å"He’s always buried in those books or shuffling around the house like he’s lost in some dream†¦I wasn’t like that.’ Baba sounded frustrated, almost angry† (23). Baba feels that the only relationship he has with Amir is solely through blood as he exclaimed, â€Å"If I hadn’t seen the doctor pull him out of my wife with my own eyes, I’d never believe he’s my son† (25). And although Baba is good man at heart, he cannot seem to rid himself of the emotional detachment he shares with Am ir. This ultimately leads to Baba’s negation of Amir. Nevertheless, despite Baba’s lack ofShow MoreRelatedAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1256 Words   |  6 Pagesthe novel, ‘The Kite Runner’, by Khaled Hosseini, occur where authority has been mistaken for enormity. Baba s expectations out of Amir and his tactics of dominance towards making Amir into someone he desires, is the power, mistook as magnitude. Also, the element that baba was sexually convoluted with Ali s wife, but had the capacity to keep it concealed and buried for long, is the power, of power. Furthermore, how Amir takes advantage of him being superior in terms of society s perception, overRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner Essay1177 Words   |  5 PagesWith No Name (Yet) â€Å"As long as there is love and memory, there is no true death† (Cassandra Clare, Lady Midnight). In Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, this quote is proven to be true through the character of Hassan. Hassan s character and memory are kept alive through both the physicality and actions of his son, Sohrab, and his best friend and half-brother, Amir. Hosseini describes Hassan as having a perfectly round face, a face like a Chinese doll chiseled from hardwood: his flat, broadRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1019 Words   |  5 Pagesknows just how hard it is to forgive yourself in The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini. When Amir makes the decision to not speak up about Hassan he felt so much guilt that he wanted Hassan and Ali to leave, he regretted it instantly. Years later, Rahim khan called Amir and asked him to come back to Afghanistan where he found out Hassan was his half-brother. Amir finally forgave himself when he found a way to make up for his mistakes. Hosseini portrays Amir as a morally ambiguous character by his guiltRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 2073 Words   |  9 Pagesexchanged cute heart necklaces or pendants or carved your names into a tree. In Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner, two kids, Amir, and Hassan seem to have a strong friendship, represented in their names carved into a pomegranate tree. However, Amir reveals weakness in their friendship when he betrays Hassan by not intervening when the town bully, Assef, sexually assaults Hassan. In Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, Carol S. Dweck describes two types of mindsets. One is the fixed mindset, which isRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 966 Words   |  4 PagesMarch 2015 Like Father Like Son Khaled Hosseini, the author of The Kite Runner, uses irony repeatedly throughout the novel. Amir, the protagonist faces the unintended consequences from his actions. These situations are often ironic as they are the complete opposite of what Amir intended to do. Through the use of irony, Khaled Hosseini reveals the hidden similarities between fathers and sons, thus creating more emotion, value, and meaning to the novel. On the day of the kite tournament, Amir hopes bringingRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1230 Words   |  5 PagesHaunting Desires In Khaled Hosseini’s novel The Kite Runner, father son relationships, specifically that of Amir and Baba, contribute to the development of the plot as well as the development of the characters involved. It is evident throughout the novel that Amir’s sole desire is to obtain Baba’s love and acceptance. However, this desire ultimately motivates him to enact rash decisions that will haunt him in the future. What Amir does not know is that Baba is also secretly the father of HassanRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1516 Words   |  7 PagesAdrian Zialcita Mrs. Sheffield English 1A 10/30/15 All for One and None for All According to Merriam Webster, being selfish is â€Å"to have or show concern for only yourself and not for the needs or feelings of other people.† In Khaled Hosseini’s book, The Kite Runner, the character Amir goes through numerous hardships throughout the story. To overcome those challenges, he performs acts that directly caused harm to the other characters in the book. Most of the time, the struggles that Amir passesRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1017 Words   |  5 Pages Kite Runner Comparison Essay In Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, several major themes arise. One of the most pronounced theme is the idea of redemption for ones past wrongdoings. The protagonist, a wealthy envious Afghan boy named Amir, retells the traumatic story of his childhood. Once readers learn of his past, they realize the issues he experienced and the events that came into play in the forming of the plots format, from one meaningful quote Hassan says â€Å" for you a thousand times over†Read MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1076 Words   |  5 Pages Shakespeare’s famous â€Å"to be or not to be?† enters the mind. In the case of The Kite Runner, readers examine a similar question: to betray or not to betray? In Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, different characters choose to either engage in or avoid betrayal due to personal motives, subsequently influencing their future. Sanaubar, Hassan’s mother, holds intense motivations to betray those closest to her. Hosseini reveals Sanaubar’s infidelity in a conversation between Rahim Khan and Amir, statingRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1161 Words   |  5 PagesKhaled Hosseini reveals the subject of friendship and loyalty in The Kite Runner. Khaled Hosseini advocates that in friendship, there must be loyalty, kindness, and trust. The theme of loyalty plays a tremendous role in The Kite Runner through Hassan and Amir. Amir and Hassan grow up together in Kabul, Afghanistan. Amir lives in a house with his father, Baba. Hassan and his father, Ali, live on the same piece of property as Amir and Baba because Hassan and Ali are their servants. Although Hassan Analysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner Khaled Hosseini reveals the subject of friendship and loyalty in The Kite Runner. Khaled Hosseini advocates that in friendship, there must be loyalty, kindness, and trust. The theme of loyalty plays a tremendous role in The Kite Runner through Hassan and Amir. Amir and Hassan grow up together in Kabul, Afghanistan. Amir lives in a house with his father, Baba. Hassan and his father, Ali, live on the same piece of property as Amir and Baba because Hassan and Ali are their servants. Although Hassan is a servant of Amir, he considers Amir his best friend: â€Å"‘Amir agha and I are friends’† (Hosseini 72). Because Hassan considers Amir his best friend, Hassan has undying loyalty to him. As time goes on, Amir starts to be jealous of Hassan and†¦show more content†¦Amir realizes that Hassan does everything for Amir: â€Å"He knew I had betrayed him and yet he was rescuing me once again, maybe for the last time† (105). Amir recognizes that he is destroyi ng the friendship with Hassan to be closer to Baba. Although Amir betrays Hassan, Hassan does not let the betrayals stop himself from being loyal to Amir. Hassan displays his loyalty to Amir by bringing positivity into the friendship and defends Amir even when Amir demolishes the friendship. For instance, Amir worries that he if he loses the kite competition, Baba is going to be disappointed. To cheer Amir up and give him faith, Hassan tells Amir, â€Å"‘Remember, Amir agha. There’s no monster, just a beautiful day’† (61). Hassan proves his loyalty by uplifting Amir’s spirits because he genuinely cares about Amir and values their friendship. Furthermore, after the kite competition comes to an end, Hassan retrieves the kite for Amir: â€Å"For you a thousand times over, he’d promised. Good old Hassan. Good old reliable Hassan. He’d kept his promise and run the last kite for me† (70). Hassan wants to provide the best care to Amir and demonstrates his loyalty by undertaking the responsibility of retrieving the kite. Lastly, after Hassan retrieves the kite, he stumbles into trouble. Instead of being weak, Hassan strives to return the kite to Amir: â€Å"‘Amir agha won the tournament and I ran this kite for him. I ran it fairly. This is his kite’† (72). Hassan does not give up on retrieving the kiteShow MoreRelatedAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1256 Words   |  6 Pagesthe novel, ‘The Kite Runner’, by Khaled Hosseini, occur where authority has been mistaken for enormity. Baba s expectations out of Amir and his tactics of dominance towards making Amir into someone he desires, is the power, mistook as magnitude. Also, the element that baba was sexually convoluted with Ali s wife, but had the capacity to keep it concealed and buried for long, is the power, of power. Furthermore, how Amir takes advantage of him being superior in terms of society s perception, over Read MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner Essay1177 Words   |  5 PagesWith No Name (Yet) â€Å"As long as there is love and memory, there is no true death† (Cassandra Clare, Lady Midnight). In Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, this quote is proven to be true through the character of Hassan. Hassan s character and memory are kept alive through both the physicality and actions of his son, Sohrab, and his best friend and half-brother, Amir. Hosseini describes Hassan as having a perfectly round face, a face like a Chinese doll chiseled from hardwood: his flat, broadRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1019 Words   |  5 Pagesknows just how hard it is to forgive yourself in The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini. When Amir makes the decision to not speak up about Hassan he felt so much guilt that he wanted Hassan and Ali to leave, he regretted it instantly. Years later, Rahim khan called Amir and asked him to come back to Afghanistan where he found out Hassan was his half-brother. Amir finally forgave himself when he found a way to make up for his mistakes. Hosseini portrays Amir as a morally ambiguous character by his guiltRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 2073 Words   |  9 Pagesexchanged cute heart necklaces or pendants or carved your names into a tree. In Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner, two kids, Amir, and Hassan seem to have a strong friendship, represented in their names carved into a pomegranate tree. However, Amir reveals weakness in their friendship when he betrays Hassan by not intervening when the town bully, Assef, sexually assaults Hassan. In Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, Carol S. Dweck describes two types of mindsets. One is the fixed mindset, which isRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 966 Words   |  4 PagesMarch 2015 Like Father Like Son Khaled Hosseini, the author of The Kite Runner, uses irony repeatedly throughout the novel. Amir, the protagonist faces the unintended consequences from his actions. These situations are often ironic as they are the complete opposite of what Amir intended to do. Through the use of irony, Khaled Hosseini reveals the hidden similarities between fathers and sons, thus creating more emotion, value, and meaning to the novel. On the day of the kite tournament, Amir hopes bringingRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1230 Words   |  5 PagesHaunting Desires In Khaled Hosseini’s novel The Kite Runner, father son relationships, specifically that of Amir and Baba, contribute to the development of the plot as well as the development of the characters involved. It is evident throughout the novel that Amir’s sole desire is to obtain Baba’s love and acceptance. However, this desire ultimately motivates him to enact rash decisions that will haunt him in the future. What Amir does not know is that Baba is also secretly the father of HassanRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1516 Words   |  7 PagesAdrian Zialcita Mrs. Sheffield English 1A 10/30/15 All for One and None for All According to Merriam Webster, being selfish is â€Å"to have or show concern for only yourself and not for the needs or feelings of other people.† In Khaled Hosseini’s book, The Kite Runner, the character Amir goes through numerous hardships throughout the story. To overcome those challenges, he performs acts that directly caused harm to the other characters in the book. Most of the time, the struggles that Amir passesRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1017 Words   |  5 Pages Kite Runner Comparison Essay In Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, several major themes arise. One of the most pronounced theme is the idea of redemption for ones past wrongdoings. The protagonist, a wealthy envious Afghan boy named Amir, retells the traumatic story of his childhood. Once readers learn of his past, they realize the issues he experienced and the events that came into play in the forming of the plots format, from one meaningful quote Hassan says â€Å" for you a thousand times over†Read MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1326 Words   |  6 PagesAaron Heideman Mrs. Edelman 11v2 English 2/17/15 The Kite Runner Essay The father-son relationship portrayed in Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, demonstrates the necessity of an empathetic fatherly figure in a child’s life. Some of these relationships exist between Hassan and Sohrab, Baba and Amir, and later Amir and Sohrab. The tense relationship Amir and his father, Baba, share and consequently, the events that stem from this relationship truly help develop the necessitation of a fatherly figureRead MoreAnalysis Of Khaled Hosseini s The Kite Runner 1076 Words   |  5 Pages Shakespeare’s famous â€Å"to be or not to be?† enters the mind. In the case of The Kite Runner, readers examine a similar question: to betray or not to betray? In Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, different characters choose to either engage in or avoid betrayal due to personal motives, subsequently influencing their future. Sanaubar, Hassan’s mother, holds intense motivations to betray those closest to her. Hosseini reveals Sanaubar’s infidelity in a conversation between Rahim Khan and Amir, stating

Friday, December 13, 2019

Role of Roman Legions in Republic and the Empire Free Essays

The role of Roman legions in creating the republic first and then the empire has been widely acknowledged. Legions emerged from the early Roman army which was composed of levied citizens and developed into a full fledged force with a modern infantry and well organized cavalry. (McCall, 2002). We will write a custom essay sample on Role of Roman Legions in Republic and the Empire or any similar topic only for you Order Now The first person to conscript soldiers into legions to the advantage of the state was Servius Tullius. By introducing the census, Tullius made it incumbent for all youth to be organized in various classes based on their income and also made it incumbent for them to join the army as a mark of being Roman citizens. This tradition of use of the legions for political consolidation has thus been the hallmark of the rise of the republic as well as the empire. In Rome service in the legion was considered mandatory. This naturally led to correlation of the legion with the republic as the concept emerged over the years by consolidation of the state. For the purposes of distinguishing between classes, the recruits were divided into five classes based on their income as each soldier had to acquire his own arm and equipment. Thus citizenship and legionnaire were both concomitant thereby laying strong linkages between the republic and the legions which were exploited over a period. The legions remained conscripted and were recalled as on required basis during the Republic thereby indicating that these were transient and to be fully exploited for sponsoring the aim of the head of the state. After the Marian reforms which were brought in at the end of the 2nd century BC, the legion was professionalized by Gaius Marius. This was done by him to enlarge the legions and enable fielding larger armies. Politically too this was important as in a Republic the state had the duty to provide jobs to people, for which legions were considered to be most appropriate organizations, once again highlighting an utilitarian trend. Assimilation of the Italian soldiers in Roman legions and grant of citizenship was also a Marian initiative thereby enhancing the numbers as well as the power of the state. The ingrained manipulative streak of the masters of the legion would be more than evident in these measures. This professionalizing also led to a realization that the legions could play an important political role and hence all governors were proscribed from leaving their province with the legions to prevent precipitation of a crisis in other states. Just such a crisis precipitated the civil wars when Caesar broke the rule crossing with his legion into Italy. The civil wars saw the end of the republic and beginning of the Empire led by Augustus in 27 BC. The legions once again were very effectively used by both Antony and Augustus the ultimate victor of the civil war which led to the establishment of the Roman empire. Once having won the war though Augustus reduced the number of legions as he was finding it difficult to sustain the force. Politically it was not expedient to have many legions which could challenge the authority of the emperor at any given time. Augustus and then his successors would not however totally abandon the concept, but only added new legions as required by the circumstances and disbanded these when no longer required by the needs of the empire, thereby once again denoting how they successfully exploited the legions for the purposes of the state. Reference 1.Mccall, Jeremiah B. (2002). The Cavalry of the Roman Republic: Cavalry Combat and Elite Reputations in the Middle and Late Republic. New York : Routledge. How to cite Role of Roman Legions in Republic and the Empire, Essay examples

Thursday, December 5, 2019

Finance and Accounting for Managers Growth of the Business Organizati

Question: Discuss about theFinance and Accounting for Managers forGrowth of the Business Organization Answer: Developing a perfect budget would assist the management to create a pre-determined operating strategy for the growth of the business organization. As such, I would not agree with the notion that developing a budget is a waste of time. According to Bierman and Smidt (2012), budget ensures that there are enough funds to cater to the daily operational activities of the business. A budget plan shall be able to assist the business organization. The budget is a significant part of the operational policies of a business enterprise (Gonalves 2014). A budget plan would ensure that the business organization shall have enough internal financing and would not have to bother with external financing of the organization. The value of budgeting in the business organization can be assessed through its financial expenditures in the business enterprise. According to Dellavigna and Pollet (2013), the budget statement reflects the operational and the financial operations of the business enterprise. Thus, the budgeting guidelines in the organization shall have a large influence on the operational and the financial operations of the business. In this regard, Gonalves (2014) noted that the budget helps in predicting the future financial condition of the business. Therefore, it can be said that the budgeting requirements also relates to the financial expenditures of the business entity. As such, the brand has to be required in maintaining the budgeting techniques of the business organization. In this regard, it can be said that a budget plans assists the business enterprise in the following ways: Facts: Budgets assist the business enterprise to present the facts in an essential manner to depict the operational and the financial operations of the business enterprise in the future accounting period (Bierman and Smidt 2012). The facts of the budget also state the necessary financial and the operational needs of the business organization. Restrictive Expenditures: The budget prepares a guideline that restricts the operational expenses of the business enterprise. The restricted capital required by the business enterprise would enable the business enterprise to strengthen the financial resources of the business enterprise. Future Financial Plan- Gtze et al. (2015) mentioned that the financial plan prepared by the business enterprise would assist the business enterprise to execute their operations in a pre-planned manner. The future financial plans shall also include the existing financial condition of the business enterprise Considerations- The considerations would include the software resources of the organization for assessing the accounting and the financial resources of the business enterprise. As such, the software budget shall have the budgeting module to assess data as per the expenses in the business enterprise. Roberts and Michael (2013) mentioned that the use of information technology has been useful in determining the budget of the organization, thereby, reducing the time and the effort that would be required in preparing the budget manually. The consideration also reflects in identifying the discrepancies in the budget. As such, the budget would be able to identify the future operational expenses of the budget and therefore be able to create a structured plan for the organization. References Bierman Jr, H. and Smidt, S., 2012.The capital budgeting decision: economic analysis of investment projects. Routledge. Dellavigna, S. and Pollet, J.M., 2013. Capital budgeting versus market timing: An evaluation using demographics. The Journal of Finance, 68(1), pp.237-270. Gonalves, S., 2014. The effects of participatory budgeting on municipal expenditures and infant mortality in Brazil.World Development,53, pp.94-110. Gtze, U., Northcott, D. and Schuster, P., 2015. Capital Budgeting and Investment Decisions. In Investment Appraisal (pp. 3-26). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. Roberts, D. and Michael, R., 2013. Topic 6: Investment Decisions and Capital Budgeting.

Thursday, November 28, 2019

Needs and Wants

It is a common weakness among most people that they spend a lot of their income on things they do not really need. Materialism has led many people to forget the fundamental difference between needs and wants. It is important to consider the priorities when preparing the budgets.Advertising We will write a custom essay sample on Needs and Wants specifically for you for only $16.05 $11/page Learn More Psychologically, a need is a phenomenon that arouses an action to an organism towards a particular purpose. It is important to note that one person’s need may not be necessarily another person’s need. Other documented philosophies point out that a need is a representative of an individual’s cost in a society. This follows that an individual who is unable to meet his/her needs does not live properly in a society (Plant, Lesser, Taylor-Gooby 1980). The economic market gives the institutional framework to satisfy and articulate the wants. N evertheless, some writers assert that there is no real difference between the needs and the wants. These arguments have been utilized in favor of extending the market to what looks like a welfare section of the society. Needs are wants that the population already has but is not prepared to pay for it. This is the only way needs come into being in economic analysis and cost-benefit analysis. Needs are categorized as those desires that an individual is willing to pay for in order to get satisfied. The only way those needs enter into an economical calculation is by looking them as wants. In this way needs posses an economical value. This argument holds that there is no a clear cut distinction between needs and wants. Needs and wants are complicated concepts (Plant, Lesser, Taylor-Gooby 1980). Leiss identifies ways in which human being defines or interprets their needs. In his view, the primary distinguishing feature is based on individuals’ activities in relation to others. To understand the needs in a particular setting, â€Å"needs are expressed as a function of social patterns and/or framework of satisfaction†. Leiss differentiates false and true needs on basis of this argument. According to Leiss, â€Å"wants shows an individual’s subjective desire† while â€Å"needs express an individual’s objective requirements†. The distinction between true needs and false needs is the the difference between needs and wants (Leiss 1988). Drawing a demarcation between needs and wants depends on the definitions assumed for both terms. An individual’s need is a minimum requirement that is shared with other people in his culture. This need must be met in order to satisfy a person’s mental and physical health.Advertising Looking for essay on social sciences? Let's see if we can help you! Get your first paper with 15% OFF Learn More On the other hand, wants are subjective in nature. Leiss puts forward an argu ment that wants are arbitrary desires reflecting an individual’s idiosyncrasies. This follows that wants are unlimited while needs are limited. This argument is supported by the fact that wanting is a subjective state and entirely physiological. Contrary to wanting, needing is an objective condition of being (Leiss 1988). In conclusion, it is possible to not know what we need, but we always know what we want. According to Leiss, this is due to the fact that wants come from our inner states. Under normal circumstances, the psychological need foe food, shelter and clothing is understood as most obvious dimension of needs. However, this argument is made trivial by the level of abstraction. Consumers make invalid decisions while preparing their budgets due to the nature of their wants. The distinction between needs and wants should therefore be utilized as a tool for changing the consumers’ behaviors (Leiss 1988). References Leiss, W. (1988) The Limits to Satisfaction: An Essay on the Problem of Needs and Commodities. Montreal, Canada : McGill-Queen’s Press. Plant, R, Lesser, H, Taylor-Gooby, P. (1980) Political philosophy and social welfare: essays on the normative basis of welfare. New York, NY: Taylor Francis. This essay on Needs and Wants was written and submitted by user Kristian West to help you with your own studies. You are free to use it for research and reference purposes in order to write your own paper; however, you must cite it accordingly. You can donate your paper here.

Monday, November 25, 2019

Free Essays on Radically Unchurched

Alvin Reid in â€Å"radically unchurched† first gives many alarming statistics about the real number of people in the world today that are not connected in any way to the body of Christ. More alarming are the statistics of the churches in the United States that are stagnant are dead. More alarming than the actual numbers is the fact that some how we have always known this but find ways to justify in our minds the reasons why we are members of these churches without doing anything about it. In the first half of the book Reid takes the time to make sure that the reader is fully aware of the definition of a â€Å"radically unchurched† person. Using many illustrations and actual real life stories to open the readers understanding to what he is writing. The stories are very touching and moving. They are stories of people we interact with everyday of our lives. Reid really brings it home to the reader. In the second half of the book Reid then puts it to application. Really in a way that will convict and open the eyes of the reader. He writes stories of churches that are reaching people in our world today, through genuine ways of kindness and caring. He gives examples as simple as paying for washing machine cost at laundry mats, and free car washes. He describes churches with a passion for the lost. These churches are friendly, they are Spirit filled churches that have genuine worship and biblical sermons. These churches do not water down the gospel but portray the gospel that Christ taught and lived. I was not just now awakened to the reality of a â€Å"radically unchurched† person, for I have spent most of my life in construction and sub-contracting millwright work in plants. I spent everyday with many unchurched men who have shared experiences about co-workers that claimed to be Christians and lived a life no different than their own. I have been raised in church all my life, but did not except the Lord Jesus ... Free Essays on Radically Unchurched Free Essays on Radically Unchurched Alvin Reid in â€Å"radically unchurched† first gives many alarming statistics about the real number of people in the world today that are not connected in any way to the body of Christ. More alarming are the statistics of the churches in the United States that are stagnant are dead. More alarming than the actual numbers is the fact that some how we have always known this but find ways to justify in our minds the reasons why we are members of these churches without doing anything about it. In the first half of the book Reid takes the time to make sure that the reader is fully aware of the definition of a â€Å"radically unchurched† person. Using many illustrations and actual real life stories to open the readers understanding to what he is writing. The stories are very touching and moving. They are stories of people we interact with everyday of our lives. Reid really brings it home to the reader. In the second half of the book Reid then puts it to application. Really in a way that will convict and open the eyes of the reader. He writes stories of churches that are reaching people in our world today, through genuine ways of kindness and caring. He gives examples as simple as paying for washing machine cost at laundry mats, and free car washes. He describes churches with a passion for the lost. These churches are friendly, they are Spirit filled churches that have genuine worship and biblical sermons. These churches do not water down the gospel but portray the gospel that Christ taught and lived. I was not just now awakened to the reality of a â€Å"radically unchurched† person, for I have spent most of my life in construction and sub-contracting millwright work in plants. I spent everyday with many unchurched men who have shared experiences about co-workers that claimed to be Christians and lived a life no different than their own. I have been raised in church all my life, but did not except the Lord Jesus ...

Thursday, November 21, 2019

Managing Secuity in Prisons Research Paper Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 2000 words

Managing Secuity in Prisons - Research Paper Example The paper ends in a conclusion that offers the reader a second thought in the effort towards ensuring more favourable and habitable surroundings and security conditions within the prisons. The separate system is a version of reformatory organization that is based on the standard of securing hostages in solitary imprisonment. Having started in the 19th century, the intent of such a detention centre was that of reparation by the detainees through quiet reflection. More typically, though, the separate system refers to a precise jail architecture created to support that system (Cole, 2012). The first separate system jail existed in the U.S. Its design was erected by other numerous prisons worldwide. This structure encouraged the division of inmates from each other as a mode of rehabilitation. Typical features of a separate structure jail comprise of a central auditorium, comprising of several blistering wings of jail blocks, which side from the central antechamber and each other by magnanimous metal slabs. While all the jail building blocks are noticeable to the jail workforces at the central antechamber, single cell compartments are not observable unless the workforces enter into them singly (Brown, 2008). Thus, this structuring differs from the panopticon jails. Moreover, the gaps between the consecutive blocks and the jail walls are exercise yards. When the separate jail structure interred, inmates were kept in lonely confinement, even as they exercised. Resultantly, the prison management raised panopticon structures in the respective yards. More overt and communal working out yards replaced the 19th century panopticon formations. However, such prisons as the Pentoville in London mandated their detainees to wear their training masks during exercise, in total isolation. Most of the separate jail structures exist to date. Additionally, the